Lizzo, Fat Championing Hypocrite

I hadn’t followed the Lizzo dieting scandal because, frankly, I couldn’t care less about the in-your-face obese pop star who has been the current champion of the “love your body”/”fat is beautiful” mob. Lizzo, who performed with svelte female dancers to emphasize her proud flab, made defiant fatness part of her brand, wearing costumes that normally would be taboo for any woman not a size 6.

Well, if it works, it’s show business! But somehow toward the end of 2024, Lizzo started slimming down via Ozempic, dieting and a personal trainer, so she is now sporting a more conventional model of female beauty. Predictably, her fat fans feel betrayed, and they should.

We’ve seen this so many times before that I hesitated to even post on it, but no previous fat celebrity so aggressively asserted that she loved her extra pounds and that society’s obsession with fit female bodies had to be rejected. All of these photos…

…accompanied past features about how the singer insisted that fat was “normal” and that she “loved her curves.” And now what is she saying? She doesn’t need to say anything; her conduct speaks for her. She decided to exploit being fat as a gimmick, not caring how it would encourage unhealthy lifestyles among her female fans, then as soon as losing weight and becoming more typically attractive seemed like a wise career move—reinvention!—she discarded “fat is beautiful” like a house guest who had stayed too long.

We shall see if a performer of Lizzo’s rather unremarkable talents can stand out among all the other comely female pop singers. If not, don’t be surprised if she starts hitting the all-you-can-eat buffets again.

7 thoughts on “Lizzo, Fat Championing Hypocrite

  1. If you can’t get over the bar, lower the bar. But then, if there’s a drug you can afford to buy that allows you to get over the bar, get over the bar!

  2. In a culture in which doctors are discouraged from telling patients to lose weight to improve their health, the promotion of unhealthy weight by someone in the entertainment industry – the ubiquitous pusher of unhealthy weight ideals on the opposite end of the scale – was irresponsible.

  3. i assure you it was more than ozempic, dieting and a trainer to go from the left photo to the right photo. there was, indeed, a pastic surgeon involved.

  4. Wait. Isn’t she the one expressing outrage because an interviewer called her a musician but she thought it meant, “magician”? Yeah, I thought so. She is an idiot and anyone looking to her for lifestyle guidance gets what he/she deserves.

    jvb

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.